How do I calculate 20000 cubic feet into Pounds?
The two guys above are right! But there is an easy way to find the density. First, assemble a graduated cylinder or some other tool that measures liquid volume precisely. Next, weigh a decent sized sample of your crushed rocks and record its weight in pounds. Next, fill up a bowl or bucket or anything that you can totally submerge the rocks in with water all the way to the very tip top until water just begins to pour out. Put this bowl inside another larger container. Now carefully place all the rocks you weighed into the full, inner bucket. An amount of water will spill out as each rock is put inside the water bucket. Once you’ve put all the rocks in, lift out the inner “rock” bucket and carefully measure the volume of water that was displaced by the rocks. You may have to convert milliliters into cubic feet; it’s 1 milliliters = 3.53146667 × 10-5 cubic feet or 1 mL = 0.000353 cubic feet. Finally, you take your weight in pounds and divide it by the number of cubic feet of water that w